What a great wolf capture. I'm always excited to see nature shots that capture the mood and character of the animal. This guy looks so innocent, very cute indeed. It's very difficult to imagine him hacking something to pieces, but that's what wolves do don't they (lol). Anyway, this is a great first post, keep im commin. Cheers!!.............Amaris
Magnificient animal ... Magnificient photo ... I'm wondering if you had it to do over again ... would you have wanted to squeeze those ears of his completely into the picture ? Just Monday morning Quarterbacking on my part ... Beautiful shot ... John
Was this taken in the wild or in sanctuary? I too would like to see the entire face. There is such an intense look in the wolf's eye. Good shot. Thank you or sharing this with us :~)
This is a beautiful shot. The clarity and the close-up is just great. It doesn't hurt that the subject himself is so majestic and stunning. How did you capture this beautiful fellow up close?
Excellent photograph. This guy looks right though you and you've captured his intensity to perfection. I only wish he could be trusted enough to be patted... oops, there goes my hand...
No Sig, Just, I want to say "Thank You" to all of the talented photographers for giving me the most beautiful desktops and screensavers I could ever imagine. The artistry here is breathtaking.
"Energy follows thought; we move toward, but not beyond, what we can imagine.
What we assume, expect, or believe creates and colors our experience.
By expanding our deepest beliefs about what is possible,
we change our experience of life."
-Dan Millman (from The Laws of Spirit)
"Energy follows thought; we move toward, but not beyond, what we can imagine.
What we assume, expect, or believe creates and colors our experience.
By expanding our deepest beliefs about what is possible,
we change our experience of life."
-Dan Millman (from The Laws of Spirit)
Handmaiden to history, chronicler of the mind and the heart, writing is humankind’s most far-reaching creation, it’s forms and designs endless. During the U.S. civil war, for example, a union soldier’s letter home was written in two directions to save scarce paper. In India an artisan made such limitation a virtue by inking an article’s bylines on grains of rice. And the words you are now reading were written on a computer equipped with some 800 styles of type. Yet the purpose of writing remains unchanged: to convey meaning, whether playful, mundane, or profound.